B, Easter 5 - John 15:1–5, 1 John 4:11–17 "Branches of God's Love"
John 15:1–5 (ESV) “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit. Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you. Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.
1 John 4:11–17 (ESV) Beloved, if God so loved us, we
also ought to love one another. No one
has ever seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and his love is
perfected in us. By this we know that we
abide in him and he in us, because he has given us of his Spirit. And we have seen and testify that the Father
has sent his Son to be the Saviour of the world. Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of
God, God abides in him, and he in God.
So we have come to know and to believe the love that God has for us. God
is love, and whoever abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him. By this is love perfected with us, so that we
may have confidence for the day of judgment, because as he is so also are we in
this world.
*****
Getting liquid into cells with thick membranes can be near
impossible if the membranes are too tough.
Even if one finds a way to get the liquid in, if the membrane is not
pliable enough to grow, the membrane can break, and the life-liquid within is
lost.
The science of cells receiving liquid is known as
osmosis. A cell with a thick solution
within, naturally attracts a thinner solution through its outer membrane to
dilute the thicker within. The results
of this dissolution, the breaking up of the thicker solution, is the hydration
of the cell. Plant and animal cells work
this way by containing a thicker salty solution, and water is the solvent that
breaks down the salt and hydrates the cells in the object.
If the source of the hydration is hindered, the life of the
branches suffers. If the membranes of
the cells become thick and clogged, the cells choke themselves. If the source stops providing, everything
downstream dies. If the nutrient supply
is changed at the source, then the cells can be poisoned. And if an external action physically
separates a branch from the source, then understandably what is cut cannot
live.
Jesus calls himself the vine, and our Father as the
vinedresser. God is our gardener, and we
are the branches of Jesus Christ.
Elsewhere in God’s word we’re told we have been grafted into God through
Jesus Christ.
“For if you were cut
from what is by nature a wild olive tree, and grafted, contrary to nature, into
a cultivated olive tree, how much more will these, the natural branches, (the
Israelites) be grafted back into their
own olive tree.” (Romans 11:24 ESV)
Jesus Christ is now the vine shoot from the stump into
which God’s branches are grafted. Both
us and the Israelites get spiritual growth from the new Israel, our Saviour
Jesus Christ. Apart from Jesus Christ we
can do nothing; we cannot grow or bear any fruit!
Remaining in Christ, abiding in him, we produce fruit! What is this fruit? What does your fruit look like? Does it look like Jesus Christ? Does it point to him or to something
else? How do I remain in Christ, so that
his solvent can work its dissolution of sin within every cell of my being?
Ask yourself, “If God
can cut out the cultivated olive branch, what can he do to me, a wild olive
branch that’s been grafted into him?”
So, what is it that allows a person to remain grafted into
him? In what do I trust? Does it allow God to abide in me, so I can
receive the holiness and cleanliness of God?
Despite the dirtiness of my deeds and desires that hardens my being to
his cleanliness and holiness!
Ponder how this looks to God! If you were God, how would you deal with one
who hardens itself to the faithful softening nutrients of forgiveness?
Well, this is how God deals with it! God places an electrolyte within our being,
to draw in the nutrients from his word and his sacraments. Without this electrolyte the cells of our
spirituality would become so hardened, from the salinity of the self’s desires,
that we would lose the energy we need to exist and eventually
self-destruct. We would spiritually
collapse and die.
This electrolyte is the activity of the Holy Spirit! It comes from nutrients in God’s word and
sacraments, and it draws God’s word and sacraments through the branches of the
vine, into every living cell of our being.
This activity, of the Holy Spirit within us, gives us
spiritual growth. This electrolyte
seasons us with the salt of salvation, and it creates a new desire within
us. This is the desire to be loved by
God.
However, the electrolyte of the Holy Spirit working within
us, is already God’s love working. We
desire the love of God because God has been loving us with his word and
sacraments. The spiritual growth
occurring here does a number of things.
First, the Holy Spirit reveals to us the hardness of our
being and our resistance to God’s electrolytes of love. We’re shown how our desires of love to love,
negates our need to be loved by God, in the way that he needs to love us.
We hear the great love text of the bible, such as the first
John text today and Jesus’ summary of the Old Testament, on how to inherit
eternal life, “You shall love the Lord
your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength
and with all your mind, and your neighbour as yourself.” (Luke 10:27 ESV)
We learn very quickly the way God so loved the world, is so
different to the way, we so love the world.
Jesus says, “Whoever loves his
life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for
eternal life.” (John 12:25 ESV)
Secondly, the Spirit having revealed this leads us to cry
out, “How do I love the Lord my God with
all my heart and with all my strength and with all my mind, and my neighbour as
myself?”
Thirdly, one of three scenarios then occurs! Only one grows us with the electrolytes of
God’s love in the Holy Spirit. The other
two continue to shut out the love of God with the hardness of the human spirit
of love.
In these other two scenarios, one cries out “How do I
love?” and then decides to climb up to God and love him with one’s good works
and obedience. Unfortunately, these
works are filthy rags in the sight of God, because they disobey God and his
word.
The other of these two scenarios, one sees the hopelessness
of their spiritual health, knowing that no amount of their works will fix their
failure to love God, and they walk away from God, usually hating God, or hating
themselves, or both!
In both of these ways, climbing up to God or walking away
from him, the effects of humanity’s negative spiritual electrolytes are working
within, hardening us to the will of God.
But the third scenario is God’s way. In crying out, “How does one love God?” One
learns in God’s word, it’s God’s love that has carried them so far! Therefore, it will be God’s love that
continues to energise them with all his gifts of love for salvation and eternal
life!
It may not be immediately obvious, but God’s word and
sacraments have been flowing from the vine into the branches to give life and
vitality. Our love for God and others is
revealed in events we would usually deem ordinary rather than
extraordinary!
These are in desires like: Being still and letting God be
God in our circumstances. Waiting on God
with patience. Opening one’s heart to
God’s word to reveal sin, to willingly repent and believe our forgiveness. One is also shown in their enemies a need for
God’s grafting gift, so there’s a willing desire to forgive as one has been
forgiven.
So, in summary, first the Holy
Spirit shows us our shortfall. Second,
the Holy Spirit elicits the desire to cry out to God for help. And third, we are quietened with a revelation
of God’s work in and through his word and sacraments, where we continue to
abide in these works of love, to confess sin, and live in peace with God and
those with whom God has placed us.
Knowing that God’s love flows
to us through the vine that is Jesus Christ, and our life now comes from the
work of the Holy Spirit within, we know we ought to love one another. With this debt to love, our faith returns us
to the cycle of life where we continue to receive nutrient from Jesus Christ,
our vine, in the electrolytic empowering
work of the Holy Spirit, given in and through God’s word and sacraments.
God the Father is the vinedresser, Jesus Christ is the
vine, and the Holy Spirit seeks to hydrate the health of every spiritual cell
in the vine’s branches, which is God’s church!
Let God abide and remain within, so his love can be
perfected in us and keep us healthy in Jesus Christ. Amen.